E
edwest211
Guest
One can step past but only if allowed. It is required to stop, genuflect and cross yourself whenever you are passing by the altar.
Unless the tabernacle is elsewhere, as it has been for hundreds of years in many churches, especially monasteries and cathedrals with a choir (chapters of Canons). In which case you bow, not genuflect.One can step past but only if allowed. It is required to stop, genuflect and cross yourself whenever you are passing by the altar.
You might argue most people attended Mass in their parish church and not the cathedral, collegial or conventual churches. However every diocese has a cathedral, and for those living in proximity to the cathedral, it is their parish church. In medieval times too, a monastery was the church of the local inhabitants.However in cathedral, collegial and conventual churches, where choral functions must take place at the main altar, it is opportune to habitually conserve the Holy Eucharist at another altar than the main altar.
- Regularly, the Holy Eucharist must be kept at the main altar which is the most noble and honourable unless another altar is preferable for the veneration and cult due to this august Sacrament.
“iconostasis”. The Iconostasis and altar rail indeed have the same origin (keeping out the animals). Now I’m blanking on the name for the other wall (chancel?) in the latin rite–and couldn’t tell you where it came from, anyway.I suspect ‘alter rails’ may be the equivalent to the actual “walls” (I’m sure there’s a proper term, it just escapes me at the moment) used in the eastern Rite churches